Sunday, March 26, 2017

Burak Bekdil : Erdogan's War on the West

Erdogan's War on the West

"Make not three, but five
children. Because you are the future of Europe. That will be the best
response to the injustices against you". — Turkish President Recep
Tayyip Erdogan, to the Muslims of Europe.

Turkey, instead of embracing Europe as an ally and future partner, seems to think that it can tame Europe by blackmailing it.

The official rhetoric in Ankara unveils the irreversible incompatibility between the democratic cultures of Europe and Turkey.

In 2005, the Turkish prime minister at the time, Recep Tayyip
Erdogan, along with his Spanish counterpart, Jose Luis Rodriguez
Zapatero, became the co-chairs of a United Nations-sponsored global
effort that went by the fancy name "Alliance of Civilizations." Twelve
years later, Zapatero is a retired politician, the Western world faces
different flavors of Islamist-to-jihadist threats and Erdogan is at war
with Western civilization.

Erdogan, who was labelled
as the most virulent anti-Israeli leader in the world, once likened
Israel's operations in Gaza to Hitler's: ("Those who condemn Hitler day
and night have surpassed Hitler in barbarism.") Recently, Erdogan said
that today's German practices -- presumably Germany's blocking Turkish
politicians speaking at German rallies to support Erdogan's upcoming
referendum in Turkey -- are "not different from the Nazi practices of
the past." In another speech, he complained that "Nazism is alive in the
West." For Erdogan,
the Dutch are "spineless and ignoble" and "remnants of the Nazi past
and fascists;" and the Netherlands, which lost more than 200,000 of its
citizens during the German occupation in WWII, is a "banana republic."

To the European Union, which Turkey theoretically aspires to join, he said: "If there are any Nazis, it is you who are the Nazis".
Ironically, the Turkish ire against the West, in a recent row between
several European capitals and Ankara (over Erdogan's ambitions to hold
political rallies across Europe to address millions of Turkish expats),
reveals the unmistakable and deep-rooted anti-Semitism among Erdogan's
fans. Hundreds of Turkish protesters in the Dutch port city of Rotterdam
hurled stones at the police and shouted "Allahu akbar" -- Arabic for
"Allah is the greatest." Then, some in the crowd, in a protest that was
exclusively a dispute between Turkey and the Netherlands, shouted
"cancer Jews".
"We saw again that the word 'Jew' and 'homo' are curse words in these groups," said Esther Voet, the editor-in-chief of the Nieuw Israelietisch Weekblad.
Someone tweeted an embarrassing curse at François Hollande, the French president, mistaking his name for his nationality.
A gangster, who shot at a night club, defended himself by saying that he actually wanted to shoot at the Dutch consulate building.
For the lighter side of the Turkish ire, in another Dutch protest,
Erdogan's fans cut, skewered and squeezed oranges -- orange is the color
of the Dutch royal family. The Turkish Association of Red Meat
Producers "deported"
40 Dutch Holstein cows back to Holland. In a similar move, a member of a
district city council in Istanbul said that he would butcher a cow that
came from the Netherlands in retaliation against the Dutch.
One could simply laugh and ignore the way the Turks express their anger at the Dutch, who deported an uninvited Turkish minister who intended to make a speech to the Turkish community in the Netherlands.
The official rhetoric
in Ankara, however, unveils the irreversible incompatibility between
the democratic cultures of Europe and Turkey. For Erdogan, "the spirit
of fascism is running wild" in Europe. According to his foreign minister, Mevlut Cavusoglu, Europe is "heading toward an abyss". And it is not just the rhetoric.

Not quite knowing where best to direct its anti-Western campaign Turkey blocked some military training
and other work with NATO-partner countries, thereby obstructing NATO's
2017 rolling program of cooperation with non-EU countries. "This is
childishly hostile," said one NATO state diplomat in Ankara.
Meanwhile, Turkey, instead of embracing Europe as an ally and future
partner, seems to think that it can tame Europe by blackmailing it.
Erdogan threatened to terminate a controversial agreement with the EU,
sealed in March 2016 to stem the flow of tens of thousands of refugees
from Turkey to Europe in return for financial aid and visa-free travel
for Turks. The EU could "forget about the deal," Erdogan said half a year ago. Echoing Erdogan's threat, his interior minister, Suleyman Soylu, threatened the EU that the rich club would be shocked "if Ankara were to send 15,000 refugees to it every month. Minister Soylu said that he would "blow the minds" of EU leaders by sparking a fresh refugee crisis.
Part of the inflammatory anti-Western Turkish rhetoric and exploits
may be aiming at luring an increasingly isolated and nationalistic voter
base ahead of a critical referendum on April 16 that aims significantly
to broaden Erdogan's presidential powers. But it is also about the fact
that Erdogan views and portrays himself as the global champion of an
opaque "Muslim cause," under Turkish [read: Erdogan's] caliphate-like
leadership against the "hostile" West. As Islamists know that they
cannot defeat the West by using hard power, it is about "soft jihad".
It was not without a reason that Turkey's Foreign Minister Cavusoglu
did not talk about a "dispute," or a "diplomatic crisis," or
"negotiations for a solution." He did talk about "religious wars."
"Soon religious wars will break out in Europe," he said.
"That's the way it's going". But how do Turkish (and other) Islamists
think they can win future religious wars? How do they think their
primary warfare instrument, soft power, would work for an ultimate
Islamic victory over an "infidel" civilization?
Erdogan has the answer: He urged Muslims across Europe to have big families to "fight the injustices of the West." And not just that:

"Go live in better neighbourhoods. Drive the best cars.
Live in the best houses. Make not three, but five children. Because you
are the future of Europe. That will be the best response to the
injustices against you".

Islamists like Erdogan do not dream of "conquering" infidel lands
with fighter jets and tanks and bombs. In this "war of religion" their
primary weaponry is demographic change in favor of Muslims.
It is time to recall the poem Erdogan recited
at a public rally back in 1999: "The mosques are our barracks, the
domes our helmets, the minarets our bayonets and the faithful our
soldiers".

Burak Bekdil, one of Turkey's leading journalists, was
just fired from Turkey's leading newspaper after 29 years, for writing
what was taking place in Turkey for Gatestone. He is a Fellow at the
Middle East Forum.

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